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Apr - June 2008 Vol. 17, No. 2 |
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Carving out more valueNew beefs cuts offer consumers inexpensive yet tender and flavorful entrees
By Dan Lemke
Marshall,
Minn. — Cattle producers are
Two new
cuts — the chuck-eye steak and PHOTOS BY ROLF HAGBERG
The new cuts join the ranch cut and flat iron steaks, which the beef council started promoting several years ago as tender but inexpensive beef cuts.
“Obviously the more steaks you can sell the more value you
bring to the beef carcass,” says Clint Gehrke, AURI animal
products scientist in Marshall.
For
years, Gehrke and others have been promoting new value-added
steaks that previously had been sold as ground beef or
roasts.
An NCBA
test panel ranked the flat iron second only to the
tenderloin in tenderness. While the tenderloin wholesales
for more than $9 a pound, flat iron steaks wholesale at just
over $2 a poundand ranch cut steaks for about $1.50.
The
6-inch long flat iron is cut by removing a tough connective
tissue that runs through the top blade muscle. Because it
comes from the shoulder, it is more flavorful than a
tenderloin, which comes from under the back bone. AURI has designed educational posters for consumers and meat cutters. Gehrke and Tony Mata, an NCBA consultant, demonstrated how to cut the steaks at the annual Minnesota Association of Meat Processors convention in March. He also exhibited the new cuts and gave out samples at the Twin Cities Food & Wine Experience and the Upper Midwest Foodservice and Lodging Show.
Tyson
Foods, the world’s largest protein provider, announced at
the NCBA convention that it will wholesale flat iron and
ranch steaks, which will increase their availability in
grocery stores.
“This
is a good situation for consumers who want a good steak at a
good price,” says Gehrke. “It’s also good for beef producers
because if we have more steaks, we have more value.”
From
1990 to 2001, the average American consumed between 60 and
70 pounds of beef per year. According to NCBA, 63 percent of
the beef sold in the United States is ground beef, 16
percent steak and 12 percent roasts. However, 45 percent of
a beef carcass’ value is in the steak, compared to only 27
percent for ground beef. NCBA check-off funded research has analyzed dozens of individual muscles from lower value cuts such as the chuck and round. Tests showed several were tender enough to be sold as steaks, rather than as ground beef or arm and shoulder roasts.■
Meet the meat specialist
During the workday, Gehrke is AURI’s animal products specialist who helps develop value-added meat products. He also operates AURI’s USDAi nspected meat lab in Marshall.
Nights and weekends, he feeds a small herd of cattle on his father-in-law’s farm near Milroy.
“It’s rewarding to help develop new value-added products or
to help clients solve problems,” Gehrke says.
Gehrke has provided assistance to dozens of Minnesota meat
processors trying to develop and test new products. For
example, he helped hog producers develop nitrate-free cured
ham and bacon. He identified and tested the proper process
for making shelf-stable meats, seasoned jerkies and
sausages. And Gehrke has conducted taste panels, using
impartial focus groups to give producers feedback. Besides product-development assistance, Gehrke also teaches a Culinology® class at Southwest Minnesota State University and provides information to the state’s meat processors. He was named to the recently-formed Minnesota Food Safety and Defense Task Force, which will work on policy, training and ways to deal with food recall issues across the state. ■ |
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Apr - June 2008 AURI AG INNOVATION NEWS
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